PAGE X TH E MICIGEAN lAILY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 1944 ____________________________________________________1___1__1___L__I1 SWING ARRANGEMENTS: Band To Present First Outdoor Concert ofSeason Tomorrow Teachers Needed To Fill Present, Post-War Vacancies, Dean Says Highlighting its program with light musical comedy numbers, as well as modern American and swing arrange- ments, the University Concert Band under the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli, will give its first outdoor concert of the season at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow on the steps of the Rack- ham Building. Opening the concert with the na- tional anthem, the band will play tw numbers from its spring concert, "March Americana" by Ackerman and the ever-popular "American Sal- ute," based on "When Johnny Comes Dr. Perdomo Will Discuss Philologists Dr. Jose Perdomo of Columbia will speak on "Columbia Philologists" at 8 p. m. today in the Kellogg Auditor- ium. Prof. Charles P. Wagner of the Spanish department will be guest chairman for the evening. He will introduce the speaker and will lead the openhdiscussion to follow the lec- ture. This is the last in a series of five lectures sponsored by the Latin American Society and the Interna- tional Center in an effort to promote a better understanding here of the cultures of the Latin American coun- tries,. Dr. Perdomo is a member of the Academy of History of Columbia. He was cataloguer and chief of refer- ences at the National Library of Bogota and held a similar position with the National University of Col- umbia. He was former secretary of the National Conservatory of Music and in 1940 gave a series of confer- ences on Colombian folk lore over the national radio. The lecture is open to the public. Dr. Perdomo will speak in English. Directory Staff To Meet July 5 Students interested in working on the Summer Directory are asked to attend a meeting at 4 p.m. Wednes- day, July 5, at the Student Publica- tions Building, Al Srere, editor of the directory, announced yesterday. He said that the work, which will start at the beginning of the summer session and last about three or four weeks, will offer valuable experience in editing, advertising and selling to the students who turn out. He urged that as many students, who are able to, come out for the work, "for the number of students who show an active interest in the directory by their work on it will largely determine when the directory will appear." Srere said the directory will list the names and addresses of students en- rolled for the summer term, summer session, in the summer camps and military personnel, and it will include lists of students living in women's dormitories, fraternities and soror- ities. Marching Home," by Morton Gould. A popular number, "There's Some- thing about a Soldier" by Gay, the tone-painting "Sequoia" by La Gas- sey, a scintillating rhumba, "South American Way," the airy "Voices of Spring" by Strauss, "March Courage- ous" by Holmes and "In Malaga" by Curzon will comprise the first part of the program. A salute to every branch of the armed forces represented on campus with the traditional song of each service will also be heard on the con- cert. Featuring Webster H. Doud, S-K 2/c, USNR, in a drum specialty, the band wvill perform "Swingin' the In- gots" by Moffitt especially arranged for symphonic band. Doud, a well- known drummer, played at the recent Navy V-12 band concert and has been with many of the nation's leading bands, including Joe Kayser's and Duke Bigelow's. The band will close this outdoor concert with "The Victors," Michi- gan's rousing football song, by Louis Elbel. Local Elections In Brief .. . MYDA Elect Officers .. . New officers of the Michigan Youth for Democratic Action were elected Tuesday. They include Morton Rosenthal, president; Martha Kirkpatrick, sec- retary; and Leona Landy, treasurer. , , ' Officers Announced... The University of Michigan Club of Ann Arbor elected Milton G. Kendrick, '29, as president of the club for the coming year to replace retiring president Prof. Chester O. Wisler of the College of Engineer- ing. Other officers elected were Charles A. Saffell, '18-'19, vice- president, and Louis H. Hollway, '31E, secretary-treasurer. * * * Club Names Heads .. Canterbury Club of St. Andrews Episcopal Church elected the follow- ing officers for the fall term at their last meeting: Faith Simpson, presi- dent; Inger Glasius, secretary; and Joan Hadjisky, chairman of the pro- gram committee. Carolyn Manches- ter and Nancy Hays were the nom- inations for Interguild officers. * * ', Mu Phi Officers .. . Officers for the coming year were elected at a recent meeting of Mu, Phi Epsilon, national music honor- ary society, it was announced yes- terday. Newly elected officers are: Fran- ces Bostwick, president; Helen Brickman, vice - president; Naomi Vincent, recording secretary; Betty Lou King, corresponding secretary; Beverly Solorow ,treasurer; Ruby Kuhlman, historian; Ruth Will- iams, chaplain; and Helen Asley and Elaine Rathbun, wardens. "KAMERAD"-German soldiers, former "Herrenvolk," come over the crest of a hill with their hands over their heads in surrender to Ameri- can troops during the battle for the Norman beachhead in France. *tich t aftP/en at Wa< From a North African Air Service Command Base comes the news that Albert W. Reavley, of Lorain, Ohio, and a former student of the Univer- sity has been promoted from the rank of technician fifth grade to technician fourth grade as chief clerk in the ration distributing section of his company. T/4 Reavley was inducted March 3, 1943 at Cleveland, Ohio, and before going overseas Aug. 20, 1943, was stationed at Keesler Field, Mass.; Pendleton Field, Ore.; Sioux City Army Air Base, Ia., and Camp Kil- mer, N. J. Exchanging the classroom for the cockpit of an Army Air Forces training plane, ex-students from colleges and universities through- out the nation received their wings recently in graduation ceremonies Peruvian Will Lecture on Art Architect Rackham To Speak at Tomorrow Colonial art in Peru will be the topic of a lecture by Senor Emilie Harth-Terre, p. Peruvian architect, and guest of the State Department, at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Senor Harth-Terre is on an ob- servation tour of the larger libraries in the United States and at present he is working on plans for the rebuilding of the National Library at Lima, which was devastated by fire last year. In connection with the coming lec- ture there is an exhibition of photo- graphs of colonial architecture in the Rackham galleries this week. Twenty-five years ago Senor Harth- Terre was the first student to be graduated from the School of Archi- tecture at Lima. He also spent three years in post-graduate work in Paris. professor of fine arts in the School of Fine Arts at Lima, Senor Harth-Terre is a founding member of the National Council for Preserva- tion and Restoration of Historical Monuments. The talk will be given in Spanish and will be illustrated with lantern slides. College of Engineering May Hold Examination Prof. C. T. Olmstead of the College of Engineering announced that a special examination will be held in Ann Arbor if enough graduate en- gineers are interested i taking a state board examination. The examination offered is the one of three which an engineering stu- dent is eligible to take upon gradua- tion. It must be taken before the graduate may become a registered engineer. Those who are kntereswed should register with Prof. Olmstead. at the eleven Central Flying Train- ing (ommand advanced schools of the AAF Training Command. , "Institutions of higher learning" ranging from small colleges to the1 largest universities were represented among the thousands of new aerial fighting men who completed the AAF's rigid training program. These pilots' now are prepared to fly the Air Forces' powerful bombers and fighter ships. In the list of universities placing ex-students in this latest CFTC graduation class was this Univer- sity with 12 representatives. Fight- er pilots winning those coveted wings at Eagle Pass, Texas were second Lts. Charles R. McKinley and John R. McKinley, Jr., both cf Grosse Pointe Shores, who at- tended the University from 1940- 42. Bomber pilots graduating from Frederick Field, Okla., were Louis J. Lekus, Jr., of Detroit, who attended here from 1941-43, and Hubert O. Wood, of Chicago, 1940-41. Winning their wings as bomber pilots at Pampa Field, Tex., were John H' Steward, of Dearborn, who attended here from 1937-38, 40-41, 42-43, and Charles F. Kennedy, Jr. of VanWert, Ohio, 1940-43, and graduates from the Blackland Field, Tex., were William J. Grey, 1941- 43, and John M. Culbertson, of Wall- ed Lake, Mich., 1939-43. Graduating from Lubbock Field, Tex., was Robert E. Smith, 1942-43, from Moore Field, Tex., Robert J. Patten, of Maumee, Ohio, 1941-43, and from Aloe Field, Tex., Nolin R. Gervals, 1941-42. Wilbur C. Jacobs, of Fremont, won his Navy "Wings of Gold" and was commissioned an ensign recently in the Naval Reserve fol- lowing completion of the prescribed flight training course at Pensacola, Fla., he "Annapolis of the Air." Having been designated a Naval Aviator, Ensign Jacobs will go on active duty at one of the Navy's air operational training centers before being assigned to a combat zone. Prior to entering the Naval Service, he attended Hope College and the University. Two former students whose homes are here, John Paul Mc- Dowell, and Robert Roy Strieter, recently graduated from the Avia- tion Electrician's Mate School at Jacksonville, Fla., George Vande ande recently en- tered the Army Air Forces Training Command School at Yale University for aviation cadet training in com- munications, and upon successful completion of this course, will be commissioned a second lieutenant and assigned to active duty. School of Education To Hold Conference "What Is Ahead in Education?" will be the topic of discussion for the summer educational conference to be held by the School of Education for the week beginning July 24, Dean J. B. Edmonson announced recently. Special attention will be given to a report on a state survey of public education in Michigp q made by a commission appointed by Goyernor Harry F. Kelly. Prof. Arthur Moehl- man of the School of Administration and Supervision and Dr. Eugene El- liott, state chairman of education, are members of the group. Operetta To Be Given "Naughty Marietta," an operetta by Victor Herbert, will be given under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Ju- nior Chamber of Commerce at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Patten- gill Auditorium in the city high school. The American Civic Opera Company, with a cast of,25, will pre- sent the musical show. I .i I While there is a crying need for teachers in all kinds of work at the present time, there will even be a greater demand in the post-war pe- riod, for it is anticipated that school enrollments will increase, Dean J. B. Edmonson of the School of Education said yesterday in an interview. Teaching, he declared, is one of the oldest of occupations and one of the most necessary. Veteran Education Planned When the war is over he stated, many new courses will need to be de- signed to re-educate veterans for civ- ilian tasks and there will be the job of rehabilitating the wounded through appropriate programs of education. At that time, he said, about seven million pupils within the secondary school will need teachers for a var- iety of subjects and there will be thousands of teaching positions open- ing in colleges and universities. Dean Edmonson emphasized that teaching experience is invaluable training for various fields of work. He said that it was also a splendid ex- perience for young women who look forward to having their own homes, or to playing a vital part in the civic life of a community. Special Fields Available Once people have had the proper training to become teachers, he said, they will find many fields of teaching DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Leavey and will be presented by stu- dents of acting from the Speech De- partment. Admission is free. Coning Events The Regular Thursday Evening Record Concert regularly held in the V'Ien's Lounge of the Rackham Build- ing at 7:45 p.m. will continue this week with its survey of American music. Two groups of composers will be played: American composers of the new Boston group who studies in Europe and whose works show defi- nite European style and character- istics and European composers who tried to capture the American jazz style in their music. Of the first group we will play Loeffler's "Pagan Poem," MacDowell's Piano Concerto, and a Concertina for Piano and Orchestra by Hadley. In the second group are represented the Ragtime for Eleven Instruments by Stravin- ski and Honneger's Concertina for Piano and Small Orchestra. Grad- uates and servicemen are cordially invited. available to them. Persons with spe-1 cialized training will be needed for classes in kindergarten, physical ed- ucation, music and art.3 To meet with success, he empha- sized, one should rank high in'teach-; ing personality. He said they must1 have qualities in cooperativeness, in- dustry, initiative, patience, trust- worthiness, humor and tactfulness. Salaries Not Large Teachers' salaries, he stated, in general, are not large. No teacher, he said, will ever get rich in the way Howard Wins First Place in 'Music Contest Lt. (jg) Dean C. Howard of San- dusky, 0., who received his Master of Music degree in composition from the School of Music in 1942, has been announced as first place award win- ner in the field of original composi- tion in a contest sponsored by the National Composers Clinic. Lt. Howard's work, "Suite for Clar- inet and Strings," was honored by being selected from a thousand or more entries in a nation-wide com- petition sponsored by the clinic. As a graduate student at the Uni- versity, having received his Bachelor's degree at Baldwin-Wallace College, Lt. Howard's talent was evidenced in many ways, including the writing of scores of various campus musical pro- ductions and playing in small ensem- bles. In addition to his prize-winning composition which was written while Howard was here, he also composed a "Quintet for Strings" (in three movements), a "Quartet" and a "Symphony" (for full orchestra). 'Since Lt. Howard is at present on active duty in the Pacific he will be unable to conduct the performance of his composition before an audience of critics, comosers and publishers, who are meeting in Chicago during this week. Prof. Keeler Appointed To Pipe Code Committee Prof. Hugh E. Keeler of the Mech- anical Engineering Department has been appointed a member of the American Standards Association's Committee on Code for Pressure Pip- ing. The work of this committee covers the design, manufacture, test, instal- lation and operation of pressure pip- ing systems. The committee has al- ready completed work on an Ameri- can Standard Code for Pressure Pip- ing. that a few lawyers and businessmen may become wealthy, but on the oth- er hand, he pointed out, many be- ginning teachers receive better sal- aries than the average college grad- uate in other professions, since at the outset, teaching pays better than many other kinds of work. Dean Edmonson said that it is doubtful whether the average piofes- sional or business worker has a finan- cial advantage over the more suc- cessful teachers, especially when ac- count is taken of the value of the pension privileges available in many states and in most of the larger cities. Permanent Employment Another advantage, he stated, in choosing teaching as a career is that during the depression periods there is a permanency of employment whch is not assurred to workers in certain fields that pay more in peri- ods of prosperity. All those who are interested in learning more about the profession are urged, he said, to make an ap- pointment for a conference with members of the staff of the School of Education or with advisors in other schools. Six Har pists To Give Recital Under the direction of Lynn W. Palmer, six School of Music students will present a harp recital, high- lighted by selections from Salzedo, at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Members of the University Harp Ensemble are Elizabeth Masters, Es- ther Morgan, Gertrude Peck, Mar- garet Wardle and Virginia Werner. The ensemble will open the program with Bach's "Sixth French Suite," which will be followed by Miss Mor- lan's performance of the menuet prom Mozart's "Don Giovanni" and "Fraicheur" (Zephyrs) by Salzedo. Miss Masters will play "Two Poeti- cal Studies" and Miss Wardle, "Mir- age" and "Chanson dans la Nuit," all by Salzedo. TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes 'Bought, Rented, Repaired. STATIONERY & SUPPLIES 0. ID.*VIO ILL 314 South State St. ,~ r .1 REGISTER NOW - I CAREER COURSES FINISHING COURSES REFRESHER COURSES 29th Year ENTER ANY MONDAY PRE-COLLEGE COURSE INTENSIVE COURSES NIGHT CLASSES Air-Cooled Classrooms amilton Business College William at State Phone 7831 I C SH or TR DE I FOR YOUR OLD BOOKS SENIRS I I I